Open Access
What happened in Barendrecht?! Case study on the planned onshore carbon dioxide storage in Barendrecht, the Netherlands
S. Brunsting,T. Mikunda +1 more
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The article was published on 2010-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 85 citations till now.read more
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The future potential for Carbon Capture and Storage in climate change mitigation – an overview from perspectives of technology, economy and risk
TL;DR: According to the recent IPCC reports, the effects from anthropogenic climate change effects are becoming more serious and actions more urgent as discussed by the authors, the global mean concentration of CO2, the most importa...
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It's not only about safety: Beliefs and attitudes of 811 local residents regarding a CCS project in Barendrecht
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors surveyed 811 Barendrecht residents on a proposed local CCS project and found that most residents were quite negative about the project, and that concerns about safety and property value contributed to the mostly negative attitudes.
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Bringing the policy making perspective in: a political science approach to social acceptance
Clau Dermont,Karin Ingold,Karin Ingold,Karin Ingold,Lorenz Kammermann,Lorenz Kammermann,Isabelle Stadelmann-Steffen +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose a framework to refine the concept of social acceptance, taking into account that the stage and specificity of the policy making process heavily influence the response towards RET and the process triggered, and identify three steps that need to be addressed when defining a research design that includes social acceptance: the object and context under scrutiny, the relevant actors, and the roles they play.
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Marine baseline and monitoring strategies for carbon dioxide capture and storage (CCS)
Jerry Blackford,Jonathan M. Bull,Melis Cevatoglu,Douglas P. Connelly,Chris Hauton,Rachael H. James,Anna Lichtschlag,Henrik Stahl,Steve Widdicombe,Ian C. Wright +9 more
TL;DR: The QICS controlled release experiment demonstrates that leaks of carbon dioxide (CO2) gas can be detected by monitoring acoustic, geochemical and biological parameters within a given marine system, but the natural complexity and variability of marine system responses to (artificial) leakage strongly suggests that there are no absolute indicators of leakage or impact that can unequivocally and universally be used for all potential future storage sites as discussed by the authors.
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Developments in public communications on CCS
TL;DR: While public awareness of CCS has increased slightly from ten years ago, it remains low unless there has been some controversy about the technology in the local context, and as projects move to implementation stage the body of social science research that has focused on CCS provides a useful database of reference materials and ideas to help move projects forward.